Here's an important discussion you need to make a contribution to. And VFR, I think, is the place to do it. Though you may feel free to add a comment here if you like.
Here are my initial thoughts:
If you subscribe to the principles of the 26th Amendment, U.S. Constitution, and you think it is a legitimate alteration to the original document, AND, you fancy yourself a "conservative," then I would respectfully suggest that you need to re-examine your conservatism.
If you're a libertarian, I get it, everything's arbitrary, blah blah blah.
(Update: See also Michael K.'s response to Auster and Laura W.'s reply to Michael K. She makes a better argument than I did in refutation of Michael K.'s assertions, my rebuttal being that Michael's argument sounded a lot like the liberal way of governing -- by the exception, not the rule. I.e., if any exception to the rule can be identified (and exceptions can always be found), then the only way to account for it is to formulate laws and policies based on the exception to the rule.)
Friday, November 16, 2007
Rejecting the doctrine of universal suffrage
Posted by Terry Morris at 7:19 AM
Labels: Conservatism, Traditionalism, U.S. Constitution, VFR
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment